WP Crontrol

Beschreibung

WP Crontrol lets you view and control what’s happening in the WP-Cron system. From the admin screens you can:

View all cron events along with their arguments, recurrence, callback functions, and when they are next due.

Edit, delete, and immediately run any cron events.

Add new cron events.

Bulk delete cron events.

Add, edit, and remove custom cron schedules.

The admin screen will show you a warning message if your cron system doesn’t appear to be working (for example if your server can’t connect to itself to fire scheduled cron events).

Nutzung

Go to the Tools -> Cron Events menu to manage cron events.

Go to the Settings -> Cron Schedules menu to manage cron schedules.

Screenshots

New cron events can be added, modified, deleted, and executed.

New cron schedules can be added, giving plugin developers more options when scheduling events.

FAQ

What’s the use of adding new cron schedules?

Cron schedules are used by WordPress and plugins for scheduling events to be executed at regular intervals. Intervals must be provided by the WordPress core or a plugin in order to be used. As an example, many backup plugins provide support for periodic backups. In order to do a weekly backup, a weekly cron schedule must be entered into WP Crontrol first and then a backup plugin can take advantage of it as an interval.

How do I create a new PHP cron event?

In the Tools -> Cron Events admin panel, click on the „Add PHP Cron Event“ tab underneath the cron event table. In the form that appears, enter the schedule and next run time in the boxes. The event schedule is how often your event will be executed. If you don’t see a good interval, then add one in the Settings -> Cron Schedules admin panel. In the „Hook code“ area, enter the PHP code that should be run when your cron event is executed. You don’t need to provide the PHP opening tag (<?php).

How do I create a new regular cron event?

There are two steps to getting a functioning cron event that executes regularly. The first step is telling WordPress about the hook. This is the part that WP Crontrol was created to provide. The second step is calling a function when your hook is executed.

Step One: Adding the hook

In the Tools -> Cron Events admin panel, enter the details of the hook. You’re best off having a hookname that conforms to normal PHP variable naming conventions. The event schedule is how often your hook will be executed. If you don’t see a good interval, then add one in the Settings -> Cron Schedules admin panel.

Schritt 2: Schreiben der Funktion

This part takes place in PHP code (for example, in the functions.php file from your theme). To execute your hook, WordPress runs an action. For this reason, we need to tell WordPress which function to execute when this action is run. The following line accomplishes that:

As WordPress developers we all have had at some point the need to use WP's Cron Events to schedule one-time / recurring tasks. If you ever find yourself needing to debug a task (Was it scheduled correctly? When will it run? et cetera), WP Crontrol is everything you're looking for.
Kudos for the great job!